USA TODAY International Edition

Minority youths earning their wings

Program aims to diversify the aviation industry

- Sherri McGee McCovey

Demetrius Harris still remembers boarding a commercial flight and being greeted by two African American pilots in the cockpit.

“There was something powerful about seeing two people that looked like me doing extraordin­ary things,” he says.

That flight inspired Harris to follow a lifelong dream of becoming a profession­al pilot. Today, he’s a contract pilot for a private owner, flying Gulfstream GIV and Hawker 800XP aircraft. And he’s passing his knowledge on.

Harris, along with a group of Black aviation profession­als and aircraft mechanics, formed Fly Compton Aeronautic­al Education Foundation Inc. ( FCAEF) in 2020 to train young Black and brown pilots.

“I wanted to do for minority youth in South Los Angeles what those two African American pilots did for me,” Harris says.

The nine- month flight training program for students ages 8 to 18 uses an FAA- approved curriculum for flight schools and university aviation department­s, and incorporat­es real- world scenarios and examples so students will discover the why and how of aeronautic­al concepts – not just the facts needed to pass a test, Harris says.

“People of color make up less than 3% of all aircraft pilots and flight engineers in the aviation industry,” Harris says. The high cost of training and lack of exposure and access to resources are the main reasons for the low numbers, he says.

“Our mission is to introduce Black and brown youth in and around the Compton, California, community to the aviation industry and the many opportunit­ies that it can afford them while also contributi­ng to the diversification of an industry that has long been exclusive to individual­s of a higher economic status,” he says.

Preparing to fly: A logbook, a computer and lessons on a Cessna

The Saturday program alternates between on- site airport and Zoom classes. When students enroll, they receive a pilot kit that includes a logbook, photo ID, syllabus, flight computer and COVID- 19 kit.

A rewards program provides additional flight time, plus aviator gifts and apparel.

Students fly one of two aircraft: a Cessna 172N called “Kim” or a Piper Cherokee named “Billie Jean.” At age 15, they are eligible to graduate to a more accelerate­d program that allots an extra 2 hours of ground and flying time and an opportunit­y to continue to pursue their aviation career with private lessons from a certified flight instructor.

There is also a Birthday Club, community cleanup events, one- on- one mentoring and an annual Air Fair and Aviation Day.

“Our overall goal is to get students to the point where they can fly the airplane solo,” Harris says. “By the time that happens, the students would have accumulate­d approximat­ely 20 hours of logged flight time. We encourage all students to complete the written test for their private pilot license by the age of 16.”

The cost of the program is $ 125 with an additional $ 25 monthly fee. But financial assistance and scholarshi­ps are available for those students who are eligible to receive their private pilot license, says co- founder Ronnel Norman, a 20- year aviation industry veteran and first officer with Alaska Airlines.

A mission to change lives

Working with young people is an important mission for the program’s founders.

“I have a fascinatio­n for working with youth from our neighborho­ods and helping to change the trajectory of their lives,” says group co- founder Mike Sherrill, a 767 first officer with FedEx, who adds that he accomplish­ed multiple career goals with the help of friends and mentors he met at Compton Airport.

Jonathan Strickland has set several records at the airport where he now is a mentor alongside Sherrill.

Strickland’s interest in aviation was piqued as a teen after his parents gave him a flight simulator game. He went on to become the youngest person to fly a helicopter and an airplane on the same day and the youngest to fly a helicopter internatio­nally round- trip.

“I know that I would not be where I am today if it weren’t for the people that mentored me and supported me on my journey,” says Strickland, who at age 25 is the youngest pilot hired to fly for UPS. “That is why giving back to the students we serve is important to me.”

FCAEF is now working to roll out several other programs, including drone training, creative arts, financial literacy and a training program in mechanics that will be available to all students.

Since Fly Compton’s inception, two students have qualified for solo airplane flight certification, and the organizati­on gained national exposure when it was featured on a segment of NBC’s “Today” show. “We are proud to be a resource and a guide to the youth in our community and to ensure that we are doing our part in helping to improve the statistics of minorities in the pilot workforce,” Norman says.

 ?? SHERRI MCGEE MCCOVEY/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY ?? Pilot Jonathan Strickland instructs student Marquis Crockett. Fly Compton trains young Black and brown students from Compton, Calif., in an effort to increase diversity in a mostly white industry.
SHERRI MCGEE MCCOVEY/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY Pilot Jonathan Strickland instructs student Marquis Crockett. Fly Compton trains young Black and brown students from Compton, Calif., in an effort to increase diversity in a mostly white industry.
 ?? SHERRI MCGEE MCCOVEY/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY ?? The Fly Compton Aeronautic­al Education Foundation Inc. teaches young Black and brown people to fly.
SHERRI MCGEE MCCOVEY/ SPECIAL TO USA TODAY The Fly Compton Aeronautic­al Education Foundation Inc. teaches young Black and brown people to fly.

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